Market Place

Digital Access

Home Delivery

Local news, prep sports, Chicago sports, local and regional entertainment, business, home and lifestyle, food, classified and more! News you use every day! Daily, Daily including the e-Edition or e-Edition only.

Text Alerts

Choose your news! Select the text alerts you want to receive: breaking news, prep sports scores, school closings, weather, and more. Text alerts are a free service from SaukValley.com, but text rates may apply.

Email Newsletters

Deaths from opioids continue to rise

By John Fauber, Milwaukee Journal Sentinel (MCT)

Feb. 26, 2013

MILWAUKEE — Continuing a trend that began more than a decade ago, 16,651 people died of overdoses involving prescription narcotic painkillers in 2010, the most recent year that data were available, according to researchers with the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

In 1999, there were 4,030 such deaths involving opioids.

“This analysis confirms the predominant role opioid analgesics play in pharmaceutical overdose deaths, either alone or in combination with other drugs,” CDC researchers wrote in a report in JAMA, the Journal of the American Medical Association.

Given the growing number of patients with chronic pain who are getting opioids, the increasing number of overdose deaths is not surprising, said Stephen Abram, a pain specialist at the Medical College of Wisconsin.

Abram said there are a variety of reasons for the deaths, including prescribing doses that are too high; patients taking more than is prescribed; recreational use of illicitly obtained drugs; and a mixture of opioids and other prescription drugs.

People have been misinformed about the safety and effectiveness of opioids for treating chronic pain, said Michael Von Korff, a Seattle health researcher and member of Physicians for Responsible Opioid Prescribing.

“We won’t see a turnaround in the appalling rates of prescription opioid overdose and addiction until prescribing becomes much more selective and cautious,” Von Korff said.

The CDC analysis indicated that 82 percent of the 2010 opioid deaths were unintentional. Another 8 percent were undetermined and 9 percent were suicides.

In addition to the overdose deaths, there were 425,000 emergency department visits for misuse or abuse of opioids, including overdoses, up from 166,338 in 2004, said Chris Jones, a CDC researcher and lead author of the paper.